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Are ‘gain of function’ mutations really downhill and so not supporting of evolution?
20 Dec 2008
A researcher questions the generalization of the findings of research on ‘gain-of-function’ mutations in the thyroid hormone system, claiming an example of new, information-gaining mutations.
by Jean Lightner
Water and wind gaps carved during channelized Flood runoff
27 May 2019
When were these geomorphological features carved?
by Michael Oard
Censorship of happy Down syndrome children
24 Jan 2017
The French state tries to hide the guilt of aborting Down syndrome babies by banning a pro-life television advert.
by Phil Robinson
Born on a Saturday
29 Aug 2018
The real reason history can be the teacher that science just can’t be.
by Felix Konostey-Ahulu
Long life or eternal life?
29 Jul 2014
Long-age thinking means denying that the world’s biology changed at the Fall. But that unwittingly diminishes the Cross.
by Peter Milford
Hands up for creation!
05 Aug 2015
They’ll help you climb mountains and thread a needle, but do they give evidence of ‘survival of the fittest’.
by Jonathan W. Jones
Eolian erosion exposé
15 Oct 2010
Could some rock arches form post-Flood via wind erosion?
by Emil Silvestru
No flies on ‘freak’ sheep
07 Dec 2021
A ‘handy’ mutation in sheep could revolutionize the Australian woolgrowing industry. But it’s not evolution.
by David Catchpoole
Evolution: a message of hope?
07 Feb 2019
You think it’s no big deal how humans originated? Where, according to atheists, do meaning, value and significance come from? Is theistic evolution the answer?
by Philip Bell
The wombat
27 Feb 2019
To the first Europeans to settle in Australia, it looked like a badger. But the creature—a godsend to shipwrecked sailors—turned out to be something very different.
by David Catchpoole
Model message spreads all over the world
21 Dec 2015
After thousands of years, people can’t stop asking questions about Noah’s Ark.
by Warren Nunn and David Catchpoole
Geneticist praises the Creator
23 Jul 2018
Raised in a secular household, a budding scientist was confronted with a challenge that changed his life.
by Robert Carter